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Chapter IV Wherein the Sintons are Disappointed, and Mrs. Comstock Learns that She Can Laugh WITH the
first streak of red above the Limberlost Margaret Sinton was busy with the
gingham and the intricate paper pattern she had purchased. Wesley cooked the
breakfast and worked until he thought Elnora would be gone, then he started to
bring her mother. "Now
you be mighty careful," cautioned Margaret. "I don't know how she
will take it." "I
don't either," said Wesley philosophically, "but she's got to take it
some way. That dress has to be finished by school time in the morning." Wesley had
not slept well that night. He had been so busy framing diplomatic speeches to
make to Mrs. Comstock that sleep had little chance with him. Every step nearer
to her he approached his position seemed less enviable. By the time he reached
the front gate and started down the walk between the rows of asters and lady
slippers he was perspiring, and every plausible and convincing speech had fled
his brain. Mrs. Comstock helped him. She met him at the door. "Good
morning," she said. "Did Margaret send you for something?" "Yes,"
said Wesley. "She's got a job that's too big for her, and she wants you to
help." "Of
course I will," said Mrs. Comstock. It was no one's affair how lonely the
previous day had been, or how the endless hours of the present would drag.
"What is she doing in such a rush?" Now was his
chance. "She's
making a dress for Elnora," answered Wesley. He saw Mrs. Comstock's form
straighten, and her face harden, so he continued hastily. "You see Elnora
has been helping us at harvest time, butchering, and with unexpected visitors
for years. We've made out that she's saved us a considerable sum, and as she
wouldn't ever touch any pay for anything, we just went to town and got a few
clothes we thought would fix her up a little for the high school. We want to
get a dress done to-day mighty bad, but Margaret is slow about sewing, and she
never can finish alone, so I came after you." "And
it's such a simple little matter, so dead easy; and all so between old friends
like, that you can't look above your boots while you explain it," sneered
Mrs. Comstock. "Wesley Sinton, what put the idea into your head that
Elnora would take things bought with money, when she wouldn't take the
money?" Then
Sinton's eyes came up straightly. "Finding
her on the trail last night sobbing as hard as I ever saw any one at a funeral.
She wasn't complaining at all, but she's come to me all her life with her
little hurts, and she couldn't hide how she'd been laughed at, twitted, and run
face to face against the fact that there were books and tuition, unexpected,
and nothing will ever make me believe you didn't know that, Kate Comstock."
"If
any doubts are troubling you on that subject, sure I knew it! She was so
anxious to try the world, I thought I'd just let her take a few knocks and see
how she liked them." "As if
she'd ever taken anything but knocks all her life!" cried Wesley Sinton.
"Kate Comstock, you are a heartless, selfish woman. You've never shown
Elnora any real love in her life. If ever she finds out that thing you'll lose
her, and it will serve you right." "She
knows it now," said Mrs. Comstock icily, "and she'll be home to-night
just as usual." "Well,
you are a brave woman if you dared put a girl of Elnora's make through what she
suffered yesterday, and will suffer again to-day, and let her know you did it
on purpose. I admire your nerve. But I've watched this since Elnora was born,
and I got enough. Things have come to a pass where they go better for her, or I
interfere." "As if
you'd ever done anything but interfere all her life! Think I haven't watched
you? Think I, with my heart raw in my breast, and too numb to resent it openly,
haven't seen you and Mag Sinton trying to turn Elnora against me day after day?
When did you ever tell her what her father meant to me? When did you ever try
to make her see the wreck of my life, and what I've suffered? No indeed! Always
it's been poor little abused Elnora, and cakes, kissing, extra clothes, and encouraging
her to run to you with a pitiful mouth every time I tried to make a woman of
her." "Kate
Comstock, that's unjust," cried Sinton. "Only last night I tried to
show her the picture I saw the day she was born. I begged her to come to you
and tell you pleasant what she needed, and ask you for what I happen to know
you can well afford to give her." "I
can't!" cried Mrs. Comstock. "You know I can't!" "Then
get so you can!" said Wesley Sinton. "Any day you say the word you
can sell six thousand worth of rare timber off this place easy. I'll see to
clearing and working the fields cheap as dirt, for Elnora's sake. I'll buy you
more cattle to fatten. All you've got to do is sign a lease, to pull thousands
from the ground in oil, as the rest of us are doing all around you!" "Cut
down Robert's trees!" shrieked Mrs. Comstock. "Tear up his land!
Cover everything with horrid, greasy oil! I'll die first." "You
mean you'll let Elnora go like a beggar, and hurt and mortify her past bearing.
I've got to the place where I tell you plain what I am going to do. Maggie and
I went to town last night, and we bought what things Elnora needs most urgent
to make her look a little like the rest of the high school girls. Now here it
is in plain English. You can help get these things ready, and let us give them
to her as we want —" "She
won't touch them!" cried Mrs. Comstock. "Then you can pay us, and she can take them as her right
—" "I
won't!" "Then
I will tell Elnora just what you are worth, what you can afford, and how much
of this she owns. I'll loan her the money to buy books and decent clothes, and
when she is of age she can sell her share and pay me." Mrs.
Comstock gripped a chair-back and opened her lips, but no words came. "And,"
Sinton continued, "if she is so much like you that she won't do that, I'll
go to the county seat and lay complaint against you as her guardian before the
judge. I'll swear to what you are worth, and how you are raising her, and have
you discharged, or have the judge appoint some man who will see that she is
comfortable, educated, and decent looking!" "You —
you wouldn't!" gasped Kate Comstock. "I
won't need to, Kate!" said Sinton, his heart softening the instant the
hard words were said. "You won't show it, but you do love Elnora! You
can't help it! You must see how she needs things; come help us fix them, and be
friends. Maggie and I couldn't live without her, and you couldn't either.
You've got to love such a fine girl as she is; let it show a little!" "You
can hardly expect me to love her," said Mrs. Comstock coldly. "But
for her a man would stand back of me now, who would beat the breath out of your
sneaking body for the cowardly thing with which you threaten me. After all I've
suffered you'd drag me to court and compel me to tear up Robert's property. If
I ever go they carry me. If they touch one tree, or put down one greasy old oil
well, it will be over all I can shoot, before they begin. Now, see how quick
you can clear out of here!" "You
won't come and help Maggie with the dress?" For answer
Mrs. Comstock looked around swiftly for some object on which to lay her hands.
Knowing her temper, Wesley Sinton left with all the haste consistent with
dignity. But he did not go home. He crossed a field, and in an hour brought
another neighbour who was skilful with her needle. With sinking heart Margaret
saw them coming. "Kate
is too busy to help to-day, she can't sew before to-morrow," said Wesley
cheerfully as they entered. That
quieted Margaret's apprehension a little, though she had some doubts. Wesley
prepared the lunch, and by four o'clock the dress was finished as far as it
possibly could be until it was fitted on Elnora. If that did not entail too
much work, it could be completed in two hours. Then
Margaret packed their purchases into the big market basket. Wesley took the
hat, umbrella, and raincoat, and they went to Mrs. Comstock's. As they reached
the step, Margaret spoke pleasantly to Mrs. Comstock, who sat reading just
inside the door, but she did not answer and deliberately turned a leaf without
looking up. Wesley
Sinton opened the door and went in followed by Margaret. "Kate,"
he said, "you needn't take out your mad over our little racket on Maggie.
I ain't told her a word I said to you, or you said to me. She's not so very
strong, and she's sewed since four o'clock this morning to get this dress ready
for to-morrow. It's done and we came down to try it on Elnora." "Is
that the truth, Mag Sinton?" demanded Mrs. Comstock. "You
heard Wesley say so," proudly affirmed Mrs. Sinton. "I
want to make you a proposition," said Wesley. "Wait till Elnora
comes. Then we'll show her the things and see what she says." "How
would it do to see what she says without bribing her," sneered Mrs.
Comstock. "If
she can stand what she did yesterday, and will to-day, she can bear 'most
anything," said Wesley. "Put away the clothes if you want to, till we
tell her." "Well,
you don't take this waist I'm working on," said Margaret, "for I have
to baste in the sleeves and set the collar. Put the rest out of sight if you
like." Mrs.
Comstock picked up the basket and bundles, placed them inside her room and
closed the door. Margaret
threaded her needle and began to sew. Mrs. Comstock returned to her book, while
Wesley fidgeted and raged inwardly. He could see that Margaret was nervous and
almost in tears, but the lines in Mrs. Comstock's impassive face were set and
cold. So they sat while the clock ticked off the time — one hour, two, dusk,
and no Elnora. Just when Margaret and Wesley were discussing whether he had not
better go to town to meet Elnora, they heard her coming up the walk. Wesley
dropped his tilted chair and squared himself. Margaret gripped her sewing, and
turned pleading eyes toward the door. Mrs. Comstock closed her book and grimly
smiled. "Mother,
please open the door," called Elnora. Mrs.
Comstock arose, and swung back the screen. Elnora stepped in beside her, bent half double, the
whole front of her dress gathered into a sort of bag filled with a heavy load,
and one arm stacked high with books. In the dim light she did not see the
Sintons. "Please
hand me the empty bucket in the kitchen, mother," she said. "I just
had to bring these arrow points home, but I'm scared for fear I've spoiled my
dress and will have to wash it. I'm to clean them, and take them to the banker
in the morning, and oh, mother, I've sold enough stuff to pay for my books, my
tuition, and maybe a dress and some lighter shoes besides. Oh, mother I'm so
happy! Take the books and bring the bucket!" Then she
saw Margaret and Wesley. "Oh, glory!" she exulted. "I was just
wondering how I'd ever wait to tell you, and here you are! It's too perfectly
splendid to be true!" "Tell
us, Elnora," said Sinton. "Well
sir," said Elnora, doubling down on the floor and spreading out her skirt,
"set the bucket here, mother. These points are brittle, and should be put
in one at a time. If they are chipped I can't sell them. Well sir! I've had a
time! You know I just had to have books. I tried three stores, and they
wouldn't trust me, not even three days, I didn't know what in this world I
could do quickly enough. Just when I was almost frantic I saw a sign in a bank
window asking for caterpillars, cocoons, butterflies, arrow points, and
everything. I went in, and it was this Bird Woman who wants the insects, and
the banker wants the stones. I had to go to school then, but, if you'll believe
it" — Elnora beamed on all of them in turn as she talked and slipped the
arrow points from her dress to the pail — "if you'll believe it — but you
won't, hardly, until you look at the books — there was the mathematics teacher,
waiting at his door, and he had a set of books for me that he had telephoned a
Sophomore to bring." "How
did he happen to do that, Elnora?" interrupted Sinton. Elnora
blushed. "It
was a fool mistake I made yesterday in thinking books were just handed out to
one. There was a teachers' meeting last night and the history teacher told
about that. Professor Henley thought of me. You know I told you what he said
about my algebra, mother. Ain't I glad I studied out some of it myself this
summer! So he telephoned and a girl brought the books. Because they are marked
and abused some I get the whole outfit for two dollars. I can erase most of the
marks, paste down the covers, and fix them so they look better. But I must
hurry to the joy part. I didn't stop to eat, at noon, I just ran to the Bird
Woman's, and I had lunch with her. It was salad, hot chocolate, and lovely
things, and she wants to buy most every old scrap I ever gathered. She wants
dragonflies, moths, butterflies, and he — the banker, I mean — wants everything
Indian. This very night she came to the swamp with me and took away enough
stuff to pay for the books and tuition, and to-morrow she is going to buy some
more." Elnora laid
the last arrow point in the pail and arose, shaking leaves and bits of baked
earth from her dress. She reached into her pocket, produced her money and waved
it before their wondering eyes. "And
that's the joy part!" she exulted. "Put it up in the clock till
morning, mother. That pays for the books and tuition and —" Elnora
hesitated, for she saw the nervous grasp with which her mother's fingers closed
on the bills. Then she continued, but more slowly and thinking before she
spoke. "What
I get to-morrow pays for more books and tuition, and maybe a few, just a few,
things to wear. These shoes are so dreadfully heavy and hot, and they make such
a noise on the floor. There isn't another calico dress in the whole building,
not among hundreds of us. Why, what is that? Aunt Margaret, what are you hiding
in your lap?" She
snatched the waist and shook it out, and her face was beaming. "Have you
taken to waists all fancy and buttoned in the back? I bet you this is
mine!" "I bet
you so too," said Margaret Sinton. "You undress right away and try it
on, and if it fits, it will be done for morning. There are some low shoes, too!"
Elnora
began to dance. "Oh, you dear people!" she cried. "I can pay for
them to-morrow night! Isn't it too splendid! I was just thinking on the way
home that I certainly would be compelled to have cooler shoes until later, and
I was wondering what I'd do when the fall rains begin." "I
meant to get you some heavy dress skirts and a coat then," said Mrs.
Comstock. "I
know you said so!" cried Elnora. "But you needn't, now! I can buy
every single stitch I need myself. Next summer I can gather up a lot more
stuff, and all winter on the way to school. I am sure I can sell ferns, I know
I can nuts, and the Bird Woman says the grade rooms want leaves, grasses,
birds' nests, and cocoons. Oh, isn't this world lovely! I'll be helping with the
tax, next, mother!" Elnora
waved the waist and started for the bedroom. When she opened the door she gave
a little cry. "What
have you people been doing?" she demanded. "I never saw so many
interesting bundles in all my life. I'm 'skeered' to death for fear I can't pay
for them, and will have to give up something." "Wouldn't
you take them, if you could not pay for them, Elnora?" asked her mother
instantly. "Why,
not unless you did," answered Elnora. "People have no right to wear
things they can't afford, have they?" "But
from such old friends as Maggie and Wesley!" Mrs. Comstock's voice was
oily with triumph. "From
them least of all," cried Elnora stoutly. "From a stranger sooner
than from them, to whom I owe so much more than I ever can pay now." "Well,
you don't have to," said Mrs. Comstock. "Maggie just selected these
things, because she is more in touch with the world, and has got such good
taste. You can pay as long as your money holds out, and if there's more
necessary, maybe I can sell the butcher a calf, or if things are too costly for
us, of course, they can take them back. Put on the waist now, and then you can look
over the rest and see if they are suitable, and what you want." Elnora
stepped into the adjoining room and closed the door. Mrs. Comstock picked up
the bucket and started for the well with it. At the bedroom she paused. "Elnora,
were you going to wash these arrow points?" "Yes.
The Bird Woman says they sell better if they are clean, so it can be seen that
there are no defects in them." "Of
course," said Mrs. Comstock. "Some of them seem quite baked. Shall I
put them to soak? Do you want to take them in the morning?" "Yes,
I do," answered Elnora. "If you would just fill the pail with
water." Mrs.
Comstock left the room. Wesley Sinton sat with his back to the window in the
west end of the cabin which overlooked the well. A suppressed sound behind him
caused him to turn quickly. Then he arose and leaned over Margaret. "She's
out there laughing like a blamed monkey!" he whispered indignantly. "Well,
she can't help it!" exclaimed Margaret. "I'm
going home!" said Wesley. "Oh
no, you are not!" retorted Margaret. "You are missing the point. The
point is not how you look, or feel. It is to get these things in Elnora's possession
past dispute. You go now, and to-morrow Elnora will wear calico, and Kate
Comstock will return these goods. Right here I stay until everything we bought
is Elnora's." "What
are you going to do?" asked Wesley.
"I
don't know yet, myself," said Margaret. Then she
arose and peered from the window. At the well curb stood Katharine Comstock.
The strain of the day was finding reaction. Her chin was in the air, she was
heaving, shaking and strangling to suppress any sound. The word that slipped
between Margaret Sinton's lips shocked Wesley until he dropped on his chair,
and recalled her to her senses. She was fairly composed as she turned to
Elnora, and began the fitting. When she had pinched, pulled, and patted she
called, "Come see if you think this fits, Kate." Mrs.
Comstock had gone around to the back door and answered from the kitchen.
"You know more about it than I do. Go ahead! I'm getting supper. Don't
forget to allow for what it will shrink in washing!" "I set
the colours and washed the goods last night; it can be made to fit right
now," answered Margaret. When she
could find nothing more to alter she told Elnora to heat some water. After she
had done that the girl began opening packages. The hat
came first. "Mother!"
cried Elnora. "Mother, of course, you have seen this, but you haven't seen
it on me. I must try it on." "Don't
you dare put that on your head until your hair is washed and properly
combed," said Margaret. "Oh!"
cried Elnora. "Is that water to wash my hair? I thought it was to set the
colour in another dress." "Well,
you thought wrong," said Margaret simply. "Your hair is going to be
washed and brushed until it shines like copper. While it dries you can eat your
supper, and this dress will be finished. Then you can put on your new ribbon,
and your hat. You can try your shoes now, and if they don't fit, you and Wesley
can drive to town and change them. That little round bundle on the top of the
basket is your stockings." Margaret
sat down and began sewing swiftly, and a little later opened the machine, and
ran several long seams. Elnora
returned in a few minutes holding up her skirts and stepping daintily in the
new shoes. "Don't
soil them, honey, else you're sure they fit," cautioned Wesley. "They
seem just a trifle large, maybe," said Elnora dubiously, and Wesley knelt
to feel. He and Margaret thought them a fit, and then Elnora appealed to her
mother. Mrs. Comstock appeared wiping her hands on her apron. She examined the
shoes critically. "They
seem to fit," she said, "but they are away too fine to walk country
roads." "I
think so, too," said Elnora instantly. "We had better take these back
and get a cheaper pair." "Oh,
let them go for this time," said Mrs. Comstock. "They are so pretty,
I hate to part with them. You can get cheaper ones after this." Wesley and
Margaret scarcely breathed for a long time. Then Wesley
went to do the feeding. Elnora set the table. When the water was hot, Margaret
pinned a big towel around Elnora's shoulders and washed and dried the lovely
hair according to the instructions she had been given the previous night. As
the hair began to dry it billowed out in a sparkling sheen that caught the
light and gleamed and flashed. "Now,
the idea is to let it stand naturally, just as the curl will make it. Don't you
do any of that nasty, untidy snarling, Elnora," cautioned Margaret.
"Wash it this way every two weeks while you are in school, shake it out,
and dry it. Then part it in the middle and turn a front quarter on each side
from your face. You tie the back at your neck with a string — so, and the
ribbon goes in a big, loose bow. I'll show you." One after another
Margaret Sinton tied the ribbons, creasing each of them so they could not be
returned, as she explained that she was trying to find the colour most
becoming. Then she produced the raincoat which carried Elnora into transports. Mrs.
Comstock objected. "That won't be warm enough for cold weather, and you
can't afford it and a coat, too." "I'll
tell you what I thought," said Elnora. "I was planning on the way
home. These coats are fine because they keep you dry. I thought I would get
one, and a warm sweater to wear under it cold days. Then I always would be dry,
and warm. The sweater only costs three dollars, so I could get it and the
raincoat both for half the price of a heavy cloth coat." "You
are right about that," said Mrs. Comstock. "You can change more with
the weather, too. Keep the raincoat, Elnora." "Wear
it until you try the hat," said Margaret. "It will have to do until
the dress is finished." Elnora
picked up the hat dubiously. "Mother, may I wear my hair as it is
now?" she asked. "Let
me take a good look," said Katharine Comstock. Heaven only
knows what she saw. To Wesley and to Margaret the bright young face of Elnora,
with its pink tints, its heavy dark brows, its bright blue-gray eyes, and its
frame of curling reddish-brown hair was the sweetest sight on earth, and at
that instant Elnora was radiant. "So
long as it's your own hair, and combed back as plain as it will go, I don't
suppose it cuts much ice whether it's tied a little tighter or looser,"
conceded Mrs. Comstock. "If you stop right there, you may let it go at
that." Elnora set
the hat on her head. It was only a wide tan straw with three exquisite peacock
quills at one side. Margaret Sinton cried out, Wesley slapped his knee and
sighed deeply while Mrs. Comstock stood speechless for a second. "I
wish you had asked the price before you put that on," she said
impatiently. "We never can afford it." "It's
not so much as you think," said Margaret. "Don't you see what I did?
I had them take off the quills, and put on some of those Phoebe Simms gave me
from her peacocks. The hat will only cost you a dollar and a half." She avoided
Wesley's eyes, and looked straight at Mrs. Comstock. Elnora removed the hat to
examine it. "Why,
they are those reddish-tan quills of yours!" she cried. "Mother, look
how beautifully they are set on! I'd much rather have them than those from the
store." "So
would I," said Mrs. Comstock. "If Margaret wants to spare them, that
will make you a beautiful hat; dirt cheap, too! You must go past Mrs. Simms and
show her. She would be pleased to see them." Elnora sank
into a chair and contemplated her toe. "Landy, ain't I a queen?" she
murmured. "What else have I got?" "Just
a belt, some handkerchiefs, and a pair of top shoes for rainy days and colder
weather," said Margaret. "About
those high shoes, that was my idea," said Wesley. "Soon as it rains,
low shoes won't do, and by taking two pairs at once I could get them some
cheaper. The low ones are two and the high ones two fifty, together three
seventy-five. Ain't that cheap?" "That's
a real bargain," said Mrs. Comstock, "if they are good shoes, and
they look it." "This,"
said Wesley, producing the last package, "is your Christmas present from
your Aunt Maggie. I got mine, too, but it's at the house. I'll bring it up in
the morning." He handed
Margaret the umbrella, and she passed it over to Elnora who opened it and sat
laughing under its shelter. Then she kissed both of them. She brought a pencil
and a slip of paper to set down the prices they gave her of everything they had
brought except the umbrella, added the sum, and said laughingly: "Will you
please wait till to-morrow for the money? I will have it then, sure." "Elnora,"
said Wesley Sinton. "Wouldn't you —" "Elnora,
hustle here a minute!" called Mrs. Comstock from the kitchen. "I need
you!" "One
second, mother," answered Elnora, throwing off the coat and hat, and
closing the umbrella as she ran. There were several errands to do in a hurry,
and then supper. Elnora chattered incessantly, Wesley and Margaret talked all
they could, while Mrs. Comstock said a word now and then, which was all she
ever did. But Wesley Sinton was watching her, and time and again he saw a
peculiar little twist around her mouth. He knew that for the first time in
sixteen years she really was laughing over something. She had all she could do
to preserve her usually sober face. Wesley knew what she was thinking. After
supper the dress was finished, the pattern for the next one discussed, and then
the Sintons went home. Elnora gathered her treasures. When she started upstairs
she stopped. "May I kiss you good-night, mother?" she asked lightly. "Never
mind any slobbering," said Mrs. Comstock. "I should think you'd lived
with me long enough to know that I don't care for it." "Well,
I'd love to show you in some way how happy I am, and how I thank you." "I
wonder what for?" said Mrs. Comstock. "Mag Sinton chose that stuff
and brought it here and you pay for it." "Yes,
but you seemed willing for me to have it, and you said you would help me if I
couldn't pay all." "Maybe
I did," said Mrs. Comstock. "Maybe I did. I meant to get you some
heavy dress skirts about Thanksgiving, and I still can get them. Go to bed, and
for any sake don't begin mooning before a mirror, and make a dunce of
yourself." Mrs.
Comstock picked up several papers and blew out the kitchen light. She stood in
the middle of the sitting-room floor for a time and then went into her room and
closed the door. Sitting on the edge of the bed she thought for a few minutes
and then suddenly buried her face in the pillow and again heaved with laughter.
Down the
road plodded Margaret and Wesley Sinton. Neither of them had words to utter
their united thought. "Done!"
hissed Wesley at last. "Done brown! Did you ever feel like a bloomin',
confounded donkey? How did the woman do it?" "She
didn't do it!" gulped Margaret through her tears. "She didn't do anything.
She trusted to Elnora's great big soul to bring her out right, and really she
was right, and so it had to bring her. She's a darling, Wesley! But she's got a
time before her. Did you see Kate Comstock grab that money? Before six months
she'll be out combing the Limberlost for bugs and arrow points to help pay the
tax. I know her." "Well,
I don't!" exclaimed Sinton, "she's too many for me. But there is a
laugh left in her yet! I didn't s'pose there was. Bet you a dollar, if we could
see her this minute, she'd be chuckling over the way we got left." Both of
them stopped in the road and looked back. "There's
Elnora's light in her room," said Margaret. "The poor child will feel
those clothes, and pore over her books till morning, but she'll look decent to
go to school, anyway. Nothing is too big a price to pay for that." "Yes,
if Kate lets her wear them. Ten to one, she makes her finish the week with that
old stuff!" "No,
she won't," said Margaret. "She'll hardly dare. Kate made some
concessions, all right; big ones for her — if she did get her way in the main.
She bent some, and if Elnora proves that she can walk out barehanded in the
morning and come back with that much money in her pocket, an armful of books,
and buy a turnout like that, she proves that she is of some consideration, and
Kate's smart enough. She'll think twice before she'll do that. Elnora won't
wear a calico dress to high school again. You watch and see if she does. She
may have the best clothes she'll get for a time, for the least money, but she
won't know it until she tries to buy goods herself at the same rates. Wesley,
what about those prices? Didn't they shrink considerable?" "You
began it," said Wesley. "Those prices were all right. We didn't say
what the goods cost us, we said what they would cost her. Surely, she's
mistaken about being able to pay all that. Can she pick up stuff of that value
around the Limberlost? Didn't the Bird Woman see her trouble, and just give her
the money?" "I
don't think so," said Margaret. "Seems to me I've heard of her
paying, or offering to pay those who would take the money, for bugs and
butterflies, and I've known people who sold that banker Indian stuff. Once I heard
that his pipe collection beat that of the Government at the Philadelphia Centennial.
Those things have come to have a value." "Well,
there's about a bushel of that kind of valuables piled up in the woodshed, that
belongs to Elnora. At least, I picked them up because she said she wanted them.
Ain't it queer that she'd take to stones, bugs, and butterflies, and save them.
Now they are going to bring her the very thing she wants the worst. Lord, but
this is a funny world when you get to studying! Looks like things didn't all
come by accident. Looks as if there was a plan back of it, and somebody driving
that knows the road, and how to handle the lines. Anyhow, Elnora's in the
wagon, and when I get out in the night and the dark closes around me, and I see
the stars, I don't feel so cheap. Maggie, how the nation did Kate Comstock do
that?" "You
will keep on harping, Wesley. I told you she didn't do it. Elnora did it! She
walked in and took things right out of our hands. All Kate had to do was to
enjoy having it go her way, and she was cute enough to put in a few questions
that sort of guided Elnora. But I don't know, Wesley. This thing makes me
think, too. S'pose we'd taken Elnora when she was a baby, and we'd heaped on
her all the love we can't on our own, and we'd coddled, petted, and shielded
her, would she have made the woman that living alone, learning to think for
herself, and taking all the knocks Kate Comstock could give, have made of
her?" "You
bet your life!" cried Wesley, warmly. "Loving anybody don't hurt
them. We wouldn't have done anything but love her. You can't hurt a child
loving it. She'd have learned to work, to study, and grown into a woman with
us, without suffering like a poor homeless dog." "But
you don't see the point, Wesley. She would have grown into a fine woman with
us; but as we would have raised her, would her heart ever have known the world
as it does now? Where's the anguish, Wesley, that child can't comprehend?
Seeing what she's seen of her mother hasn't hardened her. She can understand
any mother's sorrow. Living life from the rough side has only broadened her.
Where's the girl or boy burning with shame, or struggling to find a way, that
will cross Elnora's path and not get a lift from her? She's had the knocks, but
there'll never be any of the thing you call 'false pride' in her. I guess we
better keep out. Maybe Kate Comstock knows what she's doing. Sure as you live,
Elnora has grown bigger on knocks than she would on love." "I
don't s'pose there ever was a very fine point to anything but I missed
it," said Wesley, "because I am blunt, rough, and have no book
learning to speak of. Since you put it into words I see what you mean, but it's
dinged hard on Elnora, just the same. And I don't keep out. I keep watching
closer than ever. I got my slap in the face, but if I don't miss my guess, Kate
Comstock learned her lesson, same as I did. She learned that I was in earnest,
that I would haul her to court if she didn't loosen up a bit, and she'll
loosen. You see if she doesn't. It may come hard, and the hinges creak, but
she'll fix Elnora decent after this, if Elnora doesn't prove that she can fix
herself. As for me, I found out that what I was doing was as much for myself as
for Elnora. I wanted her to take those things from us, and love us for giving
them. It didn't work, and but for you, I'd messed the whole thing and stuck
like a pig in crossing a bridge. But you helped me out; Elnora's got the
clothes, and by morning, maybe I won't grudge Kate the only laugh she's had in
sixteen years. You been showing me the way quite a spell now, ain't you,
Maggie?" In her attic
Elnora lighted two candles, set them on her little table, stacked the books,
and put away the precious clothes. How lovingly she hung the hat and umbrella,
folded the raincoat, and spread the new dress over a chair. She fingered the
ribbons, and tried to smooth the creases from them. She put away the hose
neatly folded, touched the handkerchiefs, and tried the belt. Then she slipped
into her white nightdress, shook down her hair that it might become thoroughly
dry, set a chair before the table, and reverently opened one of the books. A
stiff draught swept the attic, for it stretched the length of the cabin, and
had a window in each end. Elnora arose and going to the east window closed it.
She stood for a minute looking at the stars, the sky, and the dark outline of
the straggling trees of the rapidly dismantling Limberlost. In the region of
her case a tiny point of light flashed and disappeared. Elnora straightened and
wondered. Was it wise to leave her precious money there? The light flashed once
more, wavered a few seconds, and died out. The girl waited. She did not see it
again, so she turned to her books. In the
Limberlost the hulking figure of a man sneaked down the trail. "The
Bird Woman was at Freckles's room this evening," he muttered. "Wonder
what for?" He left the
trail, entered the enclosure still distinctly outlined, and approached the
case. The first point of light flashed from the tiny electric lamp on his vest.
He took a duplicate key from his pocket, felt for the padlock and opened it. The
door swung wide. The light flashed the second time. Swiftly his glance swept
the interior. "'Bout
a fourth of her moths gone. Elnora must have been with the Bird Woman and given
them to her." Then he stood tense. His keen eyes discovered the roll of bills
hastily thrust back in the bottom of the case. He snatched them up, shut off
the light, relocked the case by touch, and swiftly went down the trail. Every
few seconds he paused and listened intently. Just as he reached the road, a
second figure approached him. "Is it
you, Pete?" came the whispered question. "Yes,"
said the first man. "I was
coming down to take a peep, when I saw your flash," he said. "I heard
the Bird Woman had been at the case to-day. Anything doing?" "Not a
thing," said Pete. "She just took away about a fourth of the moths.
Probably had the Comstock girl getting them for her. Heard they were together.
Likely she'll get the rest to-morrow. Ain't picking gettin' bare these
days?" "Well,
I should say so," said the second man, turning back in disgust.
"Coming home, now?" "No, I
am going down this way," answered Pete, for his eyes caught the gleam from
the window of the Comstock cabin, and he had a desire to learn why Elnora's
attic was lighted at that hour. He slouched
down the road, occasionally feeling the size of the roll he had not taken time
to count. The attic was
too long, the light too near the other end, and the cabin stood much too far
back from the road. He could see nothing although he climbed the fence and
walked back opposite the window. He knew Mrs. Comstock was probably awake, and
that she sometimes went to the swamp behind her home at night. At times a cry
went up from that locality that paralyzed any one near, or sent them fleeing as
if for life. He did not care to cross behind the cabin. He returned to the
road, passed, and again climbed the fence. Opposite the west window he could
see Elnora. She sat before a small table reading from a book between two
candles. Her hair fell in a bright sheen around her, and with one hand she
lightly shook, and tossed it as she studied. The man stood out in the night and
watched. For a long
time a leaf turned at intervals and the hair-drying went on. The man drew nearer.
The picture grew more beautiful as he approached. He could not see so well as
he desired, for the screen was of white mosquito netting, and it angered him.
He cautiously crept closer. The elevation shut off his view. Then he remembered
the large willow tree shading the well and branching across the window at the west
end of the cabin. From childhood Elnora had stepped from the sill to a limb and
slid down the slanting trunk of the tree. He reached it and noiselessly swung
himself up. Three steps out on the big limb the man shuddered. He was within a
few feet of the girl. He could
see the throb of her breast under its thin covering and smell the fragrance of
the tossing hair. He could see the narrow bed with its pieced calico cover, the
whitewashed walls with gay lithographs, and every crevice stuck full of twigs
with dangling cocoons. There were pegs for the few clothes, the old chest, the
little table, the two chairs, the uneven floor covered with rag rugs and
braided corn husk. But nothing was worth a glance except the perfect face and
form within reach by one spring through the rotten mosquito bar. He gripped the
limb above that on which he stood, licked his lips, and breathed through his
throat to be sure he was making no sound. Elnora closed the book and laid it
aside. She picked up a towel, and turning the gathered ends of her hair rubbed
them across it, and dropping the towel on her lap, tossed the hair again. Then
she sat in deep thought. By and by words began to come softly. Near as he was
the man could not hear at first. He bent closer and listened intently. " —
ever could be so happy," murmured the soft voice. "The dress is so
pretty, such shoes, the coat, and everything. I won't have to be ashamed again,
not ever again, for the Limberlost is full of precious moths, and I always can
collect them. The Bird Woman will buy more to-morrow, and the next day, and the
next. When they are all gone, I can spend every minute gathering cocoons, and
hunting other things I can sell. Oh, thank God, for my precious, precious
money. Why, I didn't pray in vain after all! I thought when I asked the Lord to
hide me, there in that big hall, that He wasn't doing it, because I wasn't
covered from sight that instant. But I'm hidden now, I feel that." Elnora
lifted her eyes to the beams above her. "I don't know much about praying
properly," she muttered, "but I do thank you, Lord, for hiding me in
your own time and way." Her face
was so bright that it shone with a white radiance. Two big tears welled from
her eyes, and rolled down her smiling cheeks. "Oh, I do feel that you have
hidden me," she breathed. Then she blew out the lights, and the little
wooden bed creaked under her weight. Pete Corson
dropped from the limb and found his way to the road. He stood still a long
time, then started back to the Limberlost. A tiny point of light flashed in the
region of the case. He stopped with an oath. "Another
hound trying to steal from a girl," he exclaimed. "But it's likely he
thinks if he gets anything it will be from a woman who can afford it, as I
did." He went on,
but beside the fences, and very cautiously. "Swamp
seems to be alive to-night," he muttered. "That's three of us
out." He entered
a deep place at the northwest corner, sat on the ground and taking a pencil
from his pocket, he tore a leaf from a little notebook, and laboriously wrote a
few lines by the light he carried. Then he went back to the region of the case
and waited. Before his eyes swept the vision of the slender white creature with
tossing hair. He smiled, and worshipped it, until a distant rooster faintly
announced dawn. Then he unlocked the case again, and replaced the money, laid the note upon it, and went back to concealment, where he remained until Elnora came down the trail in the morning, appearing very lovely in her new dress and hat. |